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Our first destination was Lake Manyara National Park, in the middle of Tanzania's
"northern circuit" of national parks. In each park, we stayed overnight in
beautiful lodges in the Sopa and Serena hotel chains.
Twenty-eight percent of Tanzania is under some form of protection,
mostly National Parks and Game Reserves. This is a higher proportion than any
other country and represents a huge commitment by one of the poorest nations.
There is intense demand for arable land from Tanzania's growing population, most
of whom remain subsistence farmers. Most human settlement and activity are
prohibited in national parks.
Manyara, which packs a lot of diversity into a small area, is the
only park in the area that is green all year round. The park seems like a
tropical rain forest with its dense lush vegetation. Manyara, however, is a
ground water forest: it stays green through the dry season thanks to ground
water fed by springs seeping from the walls of the Great Rift Valley. East
Africa's Great Rift Valley, the only geological feature clearly visible from the
moon, is the root of much of the terrain we explored during our trip. The rift
produced some of the world's biggest volcanic mountains (including Mt. Meru and
Ngorongoro) which in turn created the fertile volcanic ash feeding the Serengeti
plains.
Stop, hey, what's that sound? Everybody look what's moving 'round: Elephants - a few metres away! On safari for less than an hour and we spy our first exotic animals. Even though Lake Manyara Park was established in 1960 to help protect the elephants, heavy poaching continued through the 1980s, decimating the herds. They are now regaining their numbers, partially because elephants from unprotected areas migrate to the safety of the parks. Elephant destruction of trees, normal and even beneficial when spread over a wide area, is becoming more of a problem as elephants are forced to concentrate in limited areas.
Lions and hyenas are capable of nabbing baby elephants, but
rarely get the chance. Herds will form a defensive ring around calves. Both male
and female African elephants have tusks, the size of which indicates their
age.
We
encountered both kinds of Impala herds. This is a breeding herd with many
females and young. Each breeding herd is shepherded by one dominant male. If the
dominant male loses a challenge from a bachelor, he forfeits his territory and
joins a bachelor herd.
Here's
an all-male bachelor herd, consisting of immature males that have yet to gain a
territory and grown-ups who've lost theirs. Only males with a territory get to
breed. So the bachelor herds have the social dynamic of a Star Trek convention.
Manyara is known for tree climbing lions
but they are so hard to find, some people believe the lions are just a
rumour concocted by the park's marketing department. The idea that a small
Tanzanian park would have a marketing department is a rumour spread by the tree
climbing lions. Or at least that's the rumour I started.
We were fortunate to spot two prides sprawled out on the stout
branches of flat-topped acacia trees. No one exactly knows why these lions take
to the trees while most grown lions don't climb. These particular trees do seem
custom designed for lion comfort: They are easy to climb and provide a cool
resting place away from biting flies and herds of buffalo and elephant.
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Friday, May 4, 2012
Lake Manyara
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